September | 2011 | The Golden Sombrero Baseball Blog | MLB, Fantasy, College & High School Baseball News

Articles from September 2011



Golden Sombrero: Chris Parmelee

Top 1: Chris Parmelee struck out swinging against David Huff

Top 4: struck out swinging against Huff

Top 6: called out on strikes against David Huff

Top 7: struck out swinging against Zach Putnam

Final Line: 0-for-4, 4 K

Notes: Despite being selected by the Twins in the first-round of the 2006 draft, Parmelee didn’t have a breakout season until 2010 when he slashed .285/.356/.401 across three levels.  After posting an .801 OPS this season for Double-A New Britain, the left-handed hitting first baseman has made the most of his chances since making his big league debut on September 6: In 80 plate-appearances, Parmelee has posted an .968 OPS that includes a 13/10 K/BB rate.  That ratio became slightly skewed on Saturday, however, when he recorded the first golden sombrero of his career against the Tribe.  If he wants to be the Twins’ first baseman of the future, he will have to show 20+ home run power across a full season – something that he’s yet to do.

Total 2011 Sombreros: 123

Moneyball’s Impact

With Moneyball opening this weekend nationwide, I have received several questions from friends and classmates about the movie since the cast is pretty loaded and the reviews so noteworthy.  I calmly have explained to them that Moneyball is the most important piece of literature ever created.  They quite obviously are skeptical and find such a claim laughable.  This is Texas after all and I do live across the highway from SMU.  I do firmly believe, though, that no book could have possibly influenced my life more profoundly than Moneyball did and continues to do.

I purchased Moneyball for my father as a Father’s Day gift shortly after it was released.  I saw a book with a baseball on the cover that allegedly was about the economical side of the game.  It sounded perfect for my dad who both loves baseball and reads the Wall Street Journal daily.  He enjoyed it, but I think he resented it too and continues to do so somewhat today.  When he was done with it, I read it.  I couldn’t put it down.  I was in high school and the books we read for school were what most would probably call classics.  I thought they were exceedingly boring and for the most part, I just read Cliff’s Notes.  Moneyball was quite possibly the first book I ever loved.  I think I understood immediately that my father and I would never see the game the same way again, and because of it I’m not sure I really began growing up and being my own person until I read it.

Moneyball represents in certain ways the game’s steps into adulthood as well.  The way the scouting side of the game is represented in the book reminds me of a screaming child who refuses to listen to reason and instead throws a tantrum.  This is obviously a dramatized version of the way the situation during the early 2000s actually was, but I did not know any better at the time and I doubt many did.  Nevertheless, Moneyball identified that the game had evolved and did so by pinpointing the exact time that outsiders took notice.

I have read Moneyball several times since then, and Whitney even agreed to read it to me after I graduated from Grinnell while we drove back to New Mexico from Iowa, stopping along the way for a buddy and teammate’s wedding.

Moneyball showed the baseball community and even those on the fringes of it that baseball players don’t have to look like Griffey or A-Rod.  They can look like Pedroia.  He won an MVP and might have gone undrafted without smart folks pointing out that “the good face” is a luxury with no bearing on whether or not someone can ball.  Balling is about finding out how to maximize every single attribute each of us has.  It’s not just the five tools and it for damn sure isn’t about being tall and lean.  It’s about barreling up, playing clean, and taking a walk if it’s offered.  More than any of that, though, it’s about understanding what makes a real, honest to God winner on the diamond and away from it.

The book opened the door to front offices and even the dugout to intellectual types who may not have signed a professional contract or even touched the diamond in an NCAA-sanctioned game.  Beyond that, though, it encouraged and maybe even forced baseball types to listen to those who had not been educated within baseball culture.  The revolution that Moneyball identified and displayed to the masses aided (maybe more so than anything else) us in realizing that there existed valuable and measurable attributes going virtually unnoticed by those who were paid to find them.

It’s not so much that Moneyball defined the revolution.  It is more that it provided it with names, faces, and a narrative.  It supplied the emotion and passion that were felt by so many as we began to understand what the implications of these new metrics really were.  The way we evaluate everything has changed since then.  For everyone at The Sombrero, its implications extend far beyond the diamond.  Moneyball is about an ideology based in critical and objective evaluation of data used to guide our decisions and our emotions.  Yeah, it taught me to take a walk, but it also taught me why I should.  It taught us that as baseball players, fans, men, friends, and whatever else we might call ourselves, we have never learned enough.  There is always ground to be gained and always a reason to know more than we do today.  Moneyball meant that the game had a future to me.  I would not be writing any of these words without what Michael Lewis and Billy Beane gave us.

Golden Sombrero: Jorge Posada

Bottom 2: Jorge Posada called out on strikes against Matt Moore

Bottom 4: struck out swinging against Moore

Bottom 6: singled to right against Dane De La Rosa

Bottom 7: struck out swinging against Alexander Torres

Bottom 8: struck out swinging against Jake McGee

Final Line: 1-for-5, 4 K

Notes: Posada collected his first golden sombrero of the year on Thursday night against the Rays.  It’s important to note that each of his strikeouts came against left-handers, as he was forced to hit from the right side – his single came against De La Rosa, a right-hander.  Appearing in only 110 games this season due to his deteriorated skillset behind the plate and the offseason acquisition of Russell Martin, Posada is currently sporting a career-low slash line of .238/.315/.398.  It’ll be interesting to see how much (or how little) playing time Posada receives this postseason.

Total 2011 Sombreros: 122

Video: Mike Stanton destroys Mike Minor

 

On Monday night, Mike Stanton belted not one, but two of his most impressive bombs of the 2011 season at home against Mike Minor and the Atlanta Braves.  While he hasn’t hit the 50 home runs that I had hoped for (he will next year), Stanton’s power has been every bit as advertised; of his 34 home runs, 26 have traveled over 400 feet.

According to ESPN Home Run Tracker (formerly Hit Tracker Online), Stanton has hit five balls over 450-feet, and 15 of his gargantuan blasts have been classified as “no-doubters.”  Thanks to MLB.com and their wise decision to allow the use of their videos, here are Stanton’s tape-measure shots from Monday night at Dolphins Stadium.

Perhaps it’s the astonishing lack of attendance and background noise, but the sound of Stanton striking the ball just sounds different than everyone else.

True Distance: 408 ft.

True Distance: 461 ft.

Golden Sombrero: Alex Liddi

Top 3: Alex Liddi struck out swinging against Kevin Slowey

Top 6: struck out swinging against Slowey

Top 7: struck out swinging against Slowey

Top 9: called out on strikes against Scott Baker

Final Line: 0-for-4, 4 K

Notes: Really not too much to say about Liddi’s golden sombrero against Slowey and the Twins on Wednesday.  It’s the sort of thing that will happen when you are a free-swinging call-up…just ask Paul Goldschmidt.  For what it’s worth, the Italian-born third baseman has shown some pop: of his four hits in 24 at-bats, Liddi has doubled and jumped the yard twice.  This year at Triple-A, he dropped 30 bombs and drove in 104 runs while fanning 170 times (559 at-bats).

Total 2011 Sombreros: 121